What are examples of phallic symbols in ancient Egyptian culture?

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Phallic symbols can represent wellness and good health and are often shaped in the form of a penis. The ancient Egyptions also reference phallic symbols with Osiris. When Osiris's body was chopped up into 13 peices, his wife went out and retrieved all of the peices of his body. All except for his penis, which was said to have been swallowed by a fish. The phallus was a symbol of fertility and Min, the God of Fertility appears to look like a penis. It's engraved into stone carvings and is found in other artifacts. There are all different forms of phallic symbols, but they are all linked to good luck and health. They were used to represent positive things and hopes for good things to come in the future. Sources: http://en.wikipedia.
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Phallic symbols can represent wellness and good health and are often shaped in the form of a penis. The ancient Egyptions also reference phallic symbols with Osiris. When Osiris's body was chopped up into 13 peices, his wife went out and retrieved all of the peices of his body. All except for his penis, which was said to have been swallowed by a fish. The phallus was a symbol of fertility and Min, the God of Fertility appears to look like a penis. It's engraved into stone carvings and is found in other artifacts. There are all different forms of phallic symbols, but they are all linked to good luck and health. They were used to represent positive things and hopes for good things to come in the future.
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The Djed pillar represents the concept of stability and is the symbolic backbone of the god Osiris. During the heb sed (Renewal Festival), the djed would be ceremonially raised as a phallic symbol symbolizing the vitality and fitness of the pharaoh to continue ruling. In ancient Egyptian art, the pharaoh was represented performing the necessary functions associated with his condition as a living god in charge of preserving and protecting the state and the well being of all of his subjects. http://www.all-about-egypt.com/egyptian-symbols.html 2. Egyptian Obelisk Obelisks are tall, slender four sided shafts carved from a single stone and topped with a point known as a pyramidion. Obelisks were known to the ancient Egyptians as Tekhenu. They were typically inscribed with the names and titles of the king who commissioned them. Obelisks were considered to be sacred to the Sun God Ra, whose main center of worsh
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